AlliedSignal buys 20 million AMP shares - Cabling Installation & Maintenance

AlliedSignal buys 20 million AMP shares


Dec 1, 1998

Mark A. DeSorbo

Despite a U.S. District Court judge`s ruling that packing amp`s board with AlliedSignal officials violates Pennsylvania`s fiduciary laws, AlliedSignal Inc. got its foot in amp Inc.`s door when it purchased 20 million shares of the Harrisburg, PA-based manufacturer of electrical, electronic, fiber-optic, and wireless interconnection devices and systems.

Judge James T. Giles also upheld amp`s amendments to its shareholder rights` plan. "If AlliedSignal`s directors and officers are elected to amp`s board of directors, they will have an inherent conflict that will necessarily put them at risk of violating Pennsylvania`s fiduciary duty standard," Judge Giles ruled. "amp`s shareholder rights` plan was amended by the board to better protect the interests of amp and its relevant constituencies and to help ensure amp shareholders the opportunity to assess the success of amp`s profit-improvement plan and judge it against AlliedSignal`s inadequate offer."

Shortly after the October ruling, AlliedSignal announced that it had purchased 20 million shares of amp stock at $44.50 each. An amp spokesman, who asked to remain anonymous, says that although AlliedSignal is now a shareholder, the company continues to follow through with a profit-improvement plan that was launched in July. amp has asked the court to give it until the shareholder`s meeting in May, when officials say the reorganization will reach its stride. The effort has yielded 3500 layoffs worldwide, man-datory furloughs for 22,000 U.S. employees, the consolidation and relocation of several of its facilities, and the movement of certain production to India and Mexico.

"We have an initiative that is in place and it hasn`t had the time to come to fruition and become more valuable than AlliedSignal`s offer," the spokesman said. "AlliedSignal doesn`t want to give us the time. They want to reap the benefits of our improvement and our hard work."

Up to 30 million more shares also were self-tendered by amp at $55 each. "Our self-tender offer will provide amp shareholders the opportunity to sell a portion of their shares at a price far in excess of AlliedSignal`s price," says Robert Ripp, amp`s chairman and chief executive. "We chose the $55 price because it gives amp the ability to deliver value to shareholders today while the company continues to take the necessary steps to increase the value tomorrow. The self-tender is our down payment on the inherent value of amp`s profit-improvement plan."

AlliedSignal officials, however, say they can comply with Judge Giles`s ruling and still move forward with the plan to acquire amp. "We are still considering appealing part of the judgment--the `poison pill` tactic of blocking Allied- Signal officials from election to amp`s board of directors," AlliedSignal spokes-man Adam Wiener says. "The judge`s ruling appears to provide a way to still proceed with our consent solicitation."

The first step AlliedSignal took in that consent solicitation was the recent purchase of amp shares. The $890-million investment, Wiener says, shows AlliedSignal`s commitment. "amp has good products and a good reputation in its markets," he adds. "We think we can add our focus on quality and customer satisfaction to that to make amp even better and even more responsive."


We Recommend

Skeletons in the telecom closet: The 10 scariest things I've seen this year

The 11 biggest cabling stories of 2011

Free app calculates loss budget

Reference poster dissects 802.11n

Fiber installation courses available online

Counterfeit cable exposed

Making the switch from 62.5- to 50-micron fiber

Telecom grounding and bonding standard published by NECA and BICSI

Free poster highlights 10 fiber-safety rules


Most Popular Articles
Top Blog Posts

TIA sets objectives for 40G over twisted pair

Cancer patients miss surgery due to cable theft

Cable tech finds 500-pound bear in customer’s basement

Nearly-electrocuted copper-cable thief speaks remorsefully

House explosions, captured on video, blamed on cable theft

Modified U.S. Army drone spies on WiFi users

Turn a wiring cabinet into a liquor cabinet


Receive Free E-mail Newsletters from Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Want to hear about more articles like this one? Sign up for our free email newsletters.



Email:

First Name:

Last Name:

Promo Code (optional):

Country:

Available Newsletters:
Cabling News

Data Centers Report

Contractor Report

 


Cabling Installation & Maintenance Topic and Resource Categories:

Data CentersCabling Standards
Network CableConnectivity Technologies
Network ProtocolsIP Convergence
WirelessDesign, Installation & Testing
Current IssueArchives
Cabling BlogBuyer's Guide